New home of New Donkey

Gubernatorial Landscape

With all the obsession in Washington over (brightening) Democratic prospects for retaking the U.S. Congress, it's good to see the Washington Post taking notice of the other big battleground for 2006: governorships.In yesterday's WaPo, Dan Balz and Chris Cillizza note that 22 Republican governorships will be up next year, as compared with 14 Dem seats. They cite New York, California, Ohio, Florida, Nevada, Arkansas and Colorado and Maryland as Republican-held state chief executive postions potentially vulnerable in 2006, with Massachusetts as an add-on if Mitt Romney decides not to go for another term. For some reason, they miss Alabama and Georgia, where Republican incumbents got a temporary boost from their reaction to Hurricane Katrina, but remain vulnerable. 'Bama's Bob Riley still has to get past Judge Roy Moore, R-Hysteria, and then will probably face Democratic Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley, a candidate with almost no negatives. And Georgia's Sonny Perdue remains a shaky pick against Democrats Cathy Cox and Mark Taylor, both of whom were running ahead of the GOPer in pre-Katrina polls.I'd add to the mix Alaska, where profoundly unpopular incumbent Republican Frank Murkowski's acting like he will run again, at a minimum creating a messy and negative GOP primary. House Democratic leader Ethan Berkowitz (disclosure: a friend of mine) is already in the field, and could be joined by former Gov. Tony Knowles, but anyway you slice it, this is not a safe seat for GOPers.The WaPo report cites Michigan's Jennifer Granholm, Wisconsin's Jim Doyle, and Illnois' Rod Blagojevich as potentially vulnerable incumbent Dems, with Iowa's open seat (vacated by Tom Vilsack) as another GOP target. But the Dem incumbents have yet to draw any kind of world-beating rivals, and the Iowa situation remains very fluid.Add it all up, and it looks like the Donkey party is in a great position to regain a majority of governorships (we currently trail 28-22). And that's great news for a party that came out of the 2004 elections afraid that it was becoming ghettoized into a small number of states.
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